PAGE TWO 040 +0604 mow comes to you VACUUM PACKED. Every trace of flavor: devouring air shut out: every bit of Precious fragranee and delicate fie vor sealed in... ENJOY REALLY FRESH - ee —— FHSS SH SSSHEHSESOOHOOOSOSD | £40600 666 FFF F60F060 OO } 3 . oy. ¢|” Sale trom the freeaing showtr, Household ; : Morning Smile : a4 $ As darkness fell and the winter) Scrapbook : ree teeeereereuceteree ren | ao ae white and chill, en canian There burne peyon the magic bg By Roberta Lee ; | LNG cle meal weyons es Foo 00-60 00006 60096-6606 0064 ; As he strolled round | ing very centent sentiy he came across the garden er, a very Old employee. Coughs A good home remedy for coughs can be made by taking onions and white sugar and boiling together into a syrup, Give one teaspoonful to the children as often as seems necessary to relieve the coughing. “you'll be pleased to hear that my son has been called to the Bar.” fully before making any comment, “Well, sir,” he replied, “from what I knows o' Master Jack, he wouldn't need much calling.” THE STARS SAY— By GENEVIEVE KEMBLE For Friday, March 21 ALTHOUGH the day starts off with zest and enthusiasm, with a practical and progressive attack on matters of major importance, prob- ably concerning new deals, asscc- lations or propositions, a deviation from practical plans and programs might result in a sudden and un- forseen crash of devastating and | | Mending Mend the shirts or other wear- ‘ng apparel before sending them to the laundry. By doing this it rill mot be necessary to disturb the carefully ironed articles in order to mend them, Boiled Water Boiled water will not have a flat taste if it 1s poured back and forth from one bottle to another. Or, shake it im a large bottle. aE. oe 3 ’ | revolutionary significance, An Cook Ss Corner 3 impetuous move, a too cager desire | to make changes or improvements, ‘ 4 is likely to wreck all foundations established. The mentality might be HUNGARIAN APPLE PUDDING | obscured, confused or easily — swerved, Those whose birthday it’ 4s have promise of a year of splendid cre- ative work, with energies and int- tlative keyed to important moves of 4 large sour apples 3 tablespoons fruit juice a cup fine, soft bread crumbs 1 tablespoon butter 2 ege yolks a@ new and progressive objective, yet 1/3 oup sugar there is a sign of ambition over- %. teaspoon salt leaping itself, either through a 2 egg whites confused mental outlook, or. an emotional or impulsive stress and strain in the way of change, revis- jon or improvement. This ‘will re- sult in havoc, disruption and dis- integration of sound ideas and well- established premises, Hold fast to the realistic and concrete, A child born on this day is well equipped for a sound and active career, of progress and accom- plishment, but erratic or reckless desire for change might prove its undoing. 1 Pare and grate apples. Add fruit ce and blend. Add bread crumbs, eam butter, add egg yolks, sugar mand salt and beat thoroughly. Add ko first mixture and combifie well. Beat egg whites until light, add re- maining sugar gradually, beating ‘until mixture will hold in peaks. Fold into first mixture amd turn {nto lightly greased baking dish. (Oven-poach in a moderate oven 350 fiegrees Fahrenheit for 1 hour. Berve with hard sauce, Six servings. ) i iY “You're right, Elsie, housekeeping is easier with KLIM handy!” When you run short of nm or need extra mitk quickly, KLIM Powdered Whole Milk is a big help! With KLIM, you can have extra milk anytime— in a minute! Wonderful milk for soups, desserts, baking, creaming coffee and tea, drinking’... for any purpose that calls for milk! KLIM Is the milk that keeps without refrigera- tion! Even after the vacuum container is opened, KLIM keeps for weeks! KLIM is simply fresh, pasteurized whole milk in handy powder form. Nothing more! Nothing less! Contains all the nourishing goodness of fresh, pas- teurized milk ... 80 good many doctors prescribe it for infants, Get KLIM at your grocer’s. And write for your FREE Klim Cook Book to The Borden Company, Limited, Spadina Crescent, Toronto 4, Ontario. it's GOT to be good!” ‘Sordens KLIM CREAMY WHOLE MILK IN HANDY POWDER FORM 1 W's Borden's Pone in Borden's ‘Canadian Cavalcade” Every Monday Night CBC Trons-Canada Network. — oo ars 1 | | The cherry paused in white review] we experience a feeling which we | Q the garden | the retired Army officer was feel- with things. Pre- “Oh, Smith,” beamed the major, Smith straightened his back care- Living& Leisure —THE WOMAN ’'S REALM— FLORIST’S WINDOW IN WINTER Out, looking in from the icy street, Through the mystery of glass, , I saw the pageant of the spring In damask lustre pass. | To tap against the pane, ' And in a leafy ambuscade | Violets lay like rain. nets Born in a tranquil hour. Candles of daffodil. —Florence Ripley Mastin, in New York Herald-Tribune., ‘ ! SIZE Smash style hit which tops a dark skirt with a light-colored ja ket may not have been created for the happy girl but she can take full advantage of it for figure improve- ment. This solves her problem by giv- ing her a light top that magn | 8 propertions, a dark — skirt. that dwarfs hip size. | Another style boon which ¢e- | signers make available to the hippy girl is that of placing details at a safe distance from her hips. De- tails—often of eye-baiting color —. which flag attention away from her, , hips are placed at the threat, shovl-| ders, waistline and above the el-) Me by sayiey, a 1 bewse ; | know Etlen's memory is net so | Skirt disguise of hips — long] Bood as it was” and as if this were! jlacking in fashions —is back ‘n/MOt enough, he gees on to cualify pleats and gathers, released below his statement ’ saying 1e’s | the waist; in a circular flare that | bells out from the slender, upper | part of the hips to conceal the bulge | below. Back fullness {is often inserted in la sheath of a skirt to hide a hip (bulge that needs concealment. { | NATTY NOTIONS Do not add salt to dried peas or {beans until cooked. They will cock quicker and will not split. If you find your cake is burnt at the bottom stand the tin in a larger one, leaving two sticks across the bottom. Put salt meat into cold water and bring to the bail. Boiling water toughens the fibres. If you have to darn a large thin place in a child’s vest, treat it as though it were a piece of embroid- ery. Stretch the part into a sood sized frame and then darn, leaving ‘a short loop at each turning point. { Mend a crack in the rim of a pan with a piece of waterproof ad- hesive tape. Such cracks often cause tears in the apron or housedress. When rethreading a graduated necklace, first arrange the beads in their right order on a strip of corrugated cardboard. Make a loop inside your child's coat collar and slip the © scarf through it. This way the scarf will stay in position and not get lost. Tie your parcels with wet string, as it will tighten when dry and will not come undone so easily IRONER TAKES BACKACHE OUT OF BIG CHORE Flat work makes up more than one-half of the family froning. An {roner will do flatwork with al- most no effort. You sit and guide the pieces under the hot plate (lie shoe, it is called) with effortiess ease. If you're not a- born mechant, try slips and pajamas, after the flatware comes easy. Then, when you really know the controls, ad- vance to dresses and shirts. Where will you keep your ironer? Hl you don’t have one of those de fuxe utility rooms? Keep your !ron- er where-you like best to work and where you will use it most often. If you like to sew and have a sewing room, you may enjoy tron- ing in the sewing room. The ironer will be convenient for pressing, too. Some ironers have special devices for pressing. ‘ * If you have a large, sunny kit- chen, where you enjoy working, you may find that the kitchen is the best place for your new ironer, You can keep your eye on the oven, answer the kitchen door, the tele- phone, tron—and still be a part of the life of the busiest and most socialeroom in the house. There #s a portable ironer on wheels that takes wp only one and three-fourths of floor space. The roll is small enough, so sleeves and legs can be pulled over it. ‘The shoe (the iron part of the ironet) locks for steam pressing. Fruits combine with peanui but- ter to make delicious sandwich fill- ings. Try peanut butter with apple sauce, crushed pineapple, sliced or mashed bananas, or chopped stewed apricots or prunes. Peanut butter teams up deliciously with choco- late, malt, or olives. Accent the natural peanut flavor with pxkles, cloves, vanilla or spices. One-fourth to one-third of day's food at thoularly for children. a alana Arse i There were pansies, in velvet bon-j tial to elegance never prevents | dividuality from piercing the con- TWO-COLOR SUIT DWARFS HIP cles __THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN ____ POOLS ESEOEEEOSEFOFESESOOOSOD IFO >OSOOSFOFOFFSPEDDD FHEDOEFOEDSEOSOPED SOLE OD EL OS + Woman's Realm Socialend Personal Fashions Literature ELEGANCE 18 AN ENVIABLE | | TRAIT Those born with a sense of ele- gance are committed for life to a state of grace more enviable than beauty. At'the sight of an elegant woman can neither forget analyze nor While her good taste soothes, its {results excite. | The fact that sobriety is ; ventions of a current fashion. Per- | sons of romantic temperament aliow the do | their personality to appear; ‘more self-confident force it Ss to | order nor disorder, neither on ne. | ligence nor austerit | ble common denon Nator is {eration. That is why neither ) vain nev the timorous ever ac} it. It takes very IMtle to s away; a perfumeoo heady, ev or a necklace too ma jis only vist ,& more Iethal effect upon it than exaggeration, Elegance always gives an impres- sion of beauty, but beauty does not | necessarily include elegance. Noveeea eee eee + : Ellen’s Diary By an stand Farmer's Wife yore POO OC eee reererrooes + + + oa oJ + t ad Is “aslip of the” pee the mindy” ONL Ty OY ing ceeasion Anes, mak gC very g scmething to put place the other I y gave her in a safe an ove searched high low fc Paid ‘tt several times Without a Sign of it 1 I needed it toot” Tt may have been “these tells, | Fllen—put them awsy for me” ov “this leather fey the pump' or “that stuff I got at the drug stor for the pigs’. This time, however it was no i such tangible item I had mislaid, but I'm af aid I must have fergolten the correct | height of the babe in the house “cross the lane. Instead of a mere twenty inches; which she was at birth, she has added eight inches to her stature and is nuaw twenty eight “strong? co Jeo tells me. I should heye remem ed it, for at the time s and I had thercughly — discussed the matter, I laughed hen he had said, smiling but nonetheless quite proudly: “I believe that Jeanie stretched her out pretty well — at least it appeared to ke a ccursider. able distance on the table, after- wards", But there is our lone grand-dughter’s height and there are times as teday wher her teeth- HELP BUILD JP RED BLOOD TO GET MORE” STRENGTH If your blood LACKS IRON! You girls and women who suffer so from simple anemia that you're pale, weak, “dragged out'’—- this may be duc to lack of iron in blood. So try Lydia E. Pinkham'’s Compound TABLETS with added iron—one of | the best home ways to help build up red blood | in such cases. Pinkham’s Tablets are one of the most effective iron tonics you can buy! LYOIA L PINAWAM'S °omroune TABLETS with added iron) ssen- in- ; Elegance is dependent neither ony .| mod- the; ance jis gone, And nothing has! aie 0040244 +++ 64044044464 + ++¢ +oee + C4404 T4FO4-40-9-0-6 6% DOROTHY DIX SAYS— g DOO OO4-4-O4O6494OF FOO FOHEFSOOEFOOSOODOSIOD HOOP OO-O-4 Post-Marital Reform Mewlywed’s Attempt To Change Mate’s Habits Bodes Little Good om ‘Ihe reascn there are so many divorces is because the first thing the revlyvecs Co 4s to try to srake each other over according to their own little blue prints, but it can’t be done without leaving be- hind a lot of blasted hopes and broken illusions that bode no good for uw marriage. Why otherwise intelligent men and women do not marry their ideals in the first place, no one knows, but they don’t. Perhaps it is because we all have the reformer complex, and we can’t keep from tgying to alter people to our taste. It is part of the compulsion that makes a woman, who knows nothing about millinery, rip up a new $40 hat and reconstruct it into a sartorial horror, and that causes a man who buys a house. to wall up the old windows and cut new ones and install a different system of plumbing and lighting. Now as long as people tinker with trying to change material tbings nearer to their hearts’ desires, it 1s an innocent diversion; but when they undertake to revise an individual's character, if is another pair of sleeves, as the French say, ‘Ihen it becomes the most Cergerevs cccupalion in which they can. possibly indulge, 4nd the iment beeceres even more hazardous when the human guinea pig ‘fe, s inevita’ because nothing in courtship prepares either the kiide cr the kridegrecm for the sheck of finding cut that their mates aid not regard them as little pieces of perfection, but, on the vontrary, censidercd them pretty poor specimens of the genus homo, leaded Gcwn with faults and weaknesses which they were going to kindly correct. treme | | ‘MARRIAGE ESSENTIALS That gives the newlyweds a body. blow from which they never really 1eccver. Fer the ene thing that is aksclutely essential to a happy marriage is for the husband and wife to idealize each other, ard for cach to believe that the other hung the moon. So the honeymoon is definitely over and you might as well hang. @cpe cn the leve rest vhen the husband, who marricd a glamour gr] becrtse she wes so pretty and cute, begins to try to make her over into a crackerjack cook and a thrifty housewife, who is. more interested in turgelew cprons than she is in mink coats, and who world rather stay at hore of evenings and listen to ber husband snore than to step out to a night club, And the same eatastrephe, only worse, happens when the wife undertakes to polish up her rough diamond. Probably more husbands, who were gecd previders and who started out devoted to the ladies to whem they were married, Have been lost through their wives cor- repting their grammar and pronunciation and table manners than any oiler way. For the one thing no man can stand is criticism from his wife. Hvsbenes are one of the things that wives have to take “as is” they want to keep them. ; | Of ccurse, if men ard women would give the subject the sere | ous thergkt iGet it deserves, they would realize that ‘Sy the time people get old enough to marry, their tastes and habits are formed, and they would pick out congenial mates to start wit! 1 deprive williers ef hvskerds end wives of ther favor e indocr sport cf pickirg cn ecech other, And so they go merrily clorg attempting | quench a souse’s thirst for liquor. Which is why diverce is cne of our most profitaly industries, troubles make her fretful, and restless, so that nothing pleases ; her, and her mother is at a loss o to know whether she needs sympathy or correction, while e usually, in Fat'’s werds ‘im angel, ere (OC from Heaven’ could not be happier nor mere winsome. i The snow was delightfully crisp; underfoot this =o morn and the! crust on it held firnt for Pard and Me as We went early down to lane's end with cur mailmg. From there, the sun wes only rising mM ‘above the hill to the Best ef our buildings, sending its bright | stream! banners across the sky, , st these the meming j Fit lovely clouds cf London jsmae billowing above the houses, | ;At the “gang-way” bridge — the }stre-m flows darkly, now that the lice has opened, but still between: |white edges, yet in a manner to] lremind ene of the open season ofr “speckled graylings” now ‘not very far away. Jamie and James. anid 1! have set a date to go a-fishing, iti; the words of James’ promise at: Ithe time “no matter what comes | lor goes’, on a fine Spring day toy }ecme. Our plans have bee made down to the details, “You n’ gran- daddy will be down on the bridge,n’ you'll look in the ro‘d n you'll say! ‘who is this that’s coming?’ “And?” I have prompted when we talked it over “It'll be me!” So far camie has never attempted to cover the distance between Rob's farm and ours aleve; though there was the (Continued cx Page 3) Lack of sufficient blood for tra in Canada who otherwise might have been saved. r nsfusion has meant death to many Already underway OOH 24O4O+4-0-6-O-> But this would | to werk a miracie that will change a duly Dora into a highbrow, or, the breakfast is a good in British Columfoia, it is the hope of the Canadian Red Cross Society that their new peacetime Blood Transfusion Service will be in operas tion in other Provinces before long, saving more and more lives. Over idea for many people. and par- $1,000,000 of (pe $5,000,000 sovght for operations in 197 by the Red } @ross will be used to organize this life-saving Service across Canada. as Pe Mee To You “Regula » +e wr oneeeeee 00.00000000 it es i Modern ‘| 3 . $4 ; Etiquette }| : 4) ; By Roberta Lee t . ¢ 9040000666 606-0066 0O 008 Q. Is it necessary to bow edch time when meeting the same per- Son a number of times in success- jon? A. No; merely senile, Q. If there are to be three Speakers at a public dinner, or ban- quet, how much time should be al- lotted to each speaker? A. Fifteen to twenty minutes is sufficient. Q. Is it customary for the bride to give presents to her brides- maids? A, Yes | ! | | OOOO OOO SOO 464OF90 06400666 How Can!!! i By Anne Ashley } FOODS OOEH OF HO OOOAOOD Q. How can I skin boiled pota- } toes easily ? A. When preparing potatoes for | boiling, instead of peeling the whole potato, just peel a narrow) strip entirely around the middle of {each potato, lengthwise, When , cooked, the skins will slip off cate | ily. ‘ \ | Q. How can I prevent material rom, stretching out of shape when utting dresses? A. Baste around and arm holes after {te goods will not Fert eoeeoe an the neckline cutting, and streteh oul cf Hew can I make ¢ odorizer for the bathrocon? Leave a bott!e of Ie:non juice on the window sill or OOOH OOHOOOOS Better English Db. C. Williams SESH HHOHHEHS ESO ROOFED OS 1. What is wrong with this sen- tence? "Every cman, woman = and child waved their hand.” 2. What is the correct pronune- jiation of “sumptuous’’? Which one of these words. is misspelled? Comparative, cocnbust- ible, comodity. 4. What docs pathetic” mean? 5. What is with gra that means cribed"? STOO OSCSOHOOS CPOtO LOO. 4 i¢ 19 ¢ 4 o o ’ the word “anti- ‘vividly des- ANSWERS 1. Say, “waved his hand.” 2, Pro- nounce sump-tu-us, tu as in picture, and three syllables, not sum-chus. 3, Commodity. 4. Naturally con- trary or opposed. (Accent first and fourth syllables), “The solamn vio- Jence of Sir Edward Carson was intensely antipathetic to Mr. Brit- oe SPOPOPOA OOOO $466 4445 4 ++. Guaranteed to Keep or double your a word beginning | ling.” — H. G. Wells. 5, Graphicr ! FHOSOFOF OOo 044, T revccvecccse r" Naturally et «4 tA DESIGN NO. E-1069 This délicate crocheted doily surrounds a central y {ine and the two cc Méasurses apy in disameter. ct contains complete To order: Send 2 to Needlework Bureau, town Guardian. Design No. £-1069) Char ———— . Name | | Address City” Provinee Grand Relet FROM SNIFFLY, STUFFY DISTRESS OF Head Colds! DOUBLE-DUTY > " NOSE DROPS WORKS FAST RIGHT WHERE TROUBLE IS! Instantly relief from head cold dis- tress starts to come when you put & little Va-tro-nol in each nostril. Also —it helps prevent colds from develop- ing if used in ti py Try it! Works fine! You'll like it! VICKS VA-TRO-NOL TRE BOLERO FOR SPRING Featuring the beautifully cut bol- ero in a sparkling new suit that boasts its own blouse, wide slim- ming waistband, and the skirt with the unpressed pleats. No. 2623 is cut in sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20, Size 16 requires 3% yards 39-inch for skirt and bolero; 1% yards 39-inch for blouse. Send 20 cents for PATTERN, which incudes complete sewing guide. Print your Name, Address and Style Number plainly. Be sure to state size you wish, Include postal unit or zone number in your address, Address Pattern Department, The Charlottetown Guardian, Pattern No, 2623 Name Address a rR. CHASES Pa radol vNeedlecraft, 2623 SIZES 10 = 20 i